Shifting Paradigms in the Medical Management of Type 2 Diabetes: Reflections on Recent Cardiovascular Outcome Trials.
J Gen Intern Med · 2017
Last updated 2026-05-28Recent studies on four diabetes drugs—empagliflozin, pioglitazone, liraglutide, and semaglutide—showed benefits in reducing cardiovascular events in people with type 2 diabetes who also have heart disease. These findings suggest that managing diabetes should focus not just on blood sugar control but also on preventing heart problems.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | J Gen Intern Med, 2017 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 20 |
| Relative citation ratio | 0.77 |
| NIH percentile | 42 |
| Molecules | — |
| Conditions studied | Type 2 Diabetes, Cardiovascular Risk Reduction |
Abstract
An important challenge in the management of patients with type 2 diabetes is cardiovascular disease (CVD) prevention. While it is well established that intensive glycemic control prevents the onset and slows the progression of certain microvascular complications, such a strategy utilized in multiple clinical trials over the past few decades has failed to show a similar benefit with regard to cardiovascular events, including mortality. Despite this, a major hope has been the discovery of glucose-lowering medications that simultaneously improve cardiovascular outcomes. Over the past year and a half, four randomized clinical trials (involving empagliflozin, pioglitazone, liraglutide, and semaglutide) have reported important benefits in preventing adverse cardiovascular outcomes in patients with or at risk for type 2 diabetes and established CVD. On the basis of these landmark trials, we propose that a paradigm shift in the management of patients with type 2 diabetes, specifically in those with prior macrovascular disease. A transition from current algorithms based primarily on hemoglobin A1c values to a more comprehensive strategy additionally focused on CVD prevention seems warranted.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 28550608 ↗